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Acoustofluidic medium exchange for preparation of electrocompetent bacteria using channel wall trapping

Gerlt, M S LU orcid ; Ruppen, P ; Leuthner, M ; Panke, S and Dual, J (2021) In Lab on a Chip 21(22). p.4487-4497
Abstract

Comprehensive integration of process steps into a miniaturised version of synthetic biology workflows remains a crucial task in automating the design of biosystems. However, each of these process steps has specific demands with respect to the environmental conditions, including in particular the composition of the surrounding fluid, which makes integration cumbersome. As a case in point, transformation, i.e. reprogramming of bacteria by delivering exogenous genetic material (such as DNA) into the cytoplasm, is a key process in molecular engineering and modern biotechnology in general. Transformation is often performed by electroporation, i.e. creating pores in the membrane using electric shocks in a low conductivity environment.... (More)

Comprehensive integration of process steps into a miniaturised version of synthetic biology workflows remains a crucial task in automating the design of biosystems. However, each of these process steps has specific demands with respect to the environmental conditions, including in particular the composition of the surrounding fluid, which makes integration cumbersome. As a case in point, transformation, i.e. reprogramming of bacteria by delivering exogenous genetic material (such as DNA) into the cytoplasm, is a key process in molecular engineering and modern biotechnology in general. Transformation is often performed by electroporation, i.e. creating pores in the membrane using electric shocks in a low conductivity environment. However, cell preparation for electroporation can be cumbersome as it requires the exchange of growth medium (high-conductivity) for low-conductivity medium, typically performed via multiple time-intensive centrifugation steps. To simplify and miniaturise this step, we developed an acoustofluidic device capable of trapping the bacterium Escherichia coli non-invasively for subsequent exchange of medium, which is challenging in acoustofluidic devices due to detrimental acoustic streaming effects. With an improved etching process, we were able to produce a thin wall between two microfluidic channels, which, upon excitation, can generate streaming fields that complement the acoustic radiation force and therefore can be utilised for trapping of bacteria. Our novel design robustly traps Escherichia coli at a flow rate of 10 μL min -1 and has a cell recovery performance of 47 ± 3% after washing the trapped cells. To verify that the performance of the medium exchange device is sufficient, we tested the electrocompetence of the recovered cells in a standard transformation procedure and found a transformation efficiency of 8 × 10 5 CFU per μg of plasmid DNA. Our device is a low-volume alternative to centrifugation-based methods and opens the door for miniaturisation of a plethora of microbiological and molecular engineering protocols.

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author
; ; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Culture Media, DNA, Electroporation, Escherichia coli/genetics, Plasmids
in
Lab on a Chip
volume
21
issue
22
pages
11 pages
publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
external identifiers
  • scopus:85119861359
  • pmid:34668506
ISSN
1473-0189
DOI
10.1039/d1lc00406a
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
ab1b76e4-31bb-41f7-9387-7bba11bb0632
date added to LUP
2023-04-12 09:18:21
date last changed
2024-04-19 20:41:06
@article{ab1b76e4-31bb-41f7-9387-7bba11bb0632,
  abstract     = {{<p>Comprehensive integration of process steps into a miniaturised version of synthetic biology workflows remains a crucial task in automating the design of biosystems. However, each of these process steps has specific demands with respect to the environmental conditions, including in particular the composition of the surrounding fluid, which makes integration cumbersome. As a case in point, transformation,  i.e. reprogramming of bacteria by delivering exogenous genetic material (such as DNA) into the cytoplasm, is a key process in molecular engineering and modern biotechnology in general. Transformation is often performed by electroporation,  i.e. creating pores in the membrane using electric shocks in a low conductivity environment. However, cell preparation for electroporation can be cumbersome as it requires the exchange of growth medium (high-conductivity) for low-conductivity medium, typically performed  via multiple time-intensive centrifugation steps. To simplify and miniaturise this step, we developed an acoustofluidic device capable of trapping the bacterium  Escherichia coli non-invasively for subsequent exchange of medium, which is challenging in acoustofluidic devices due to detrimental acoustic streaming effects. With an improved etching process, we were able to produce a thin wall between two microfluidic channels, which, upon excitation, can generate streaming fields that complement the acoustic radiation force and therefore can be utilised for trapping of bacteria. Our novel design robustly traps Escherichia coli at a flow rate of 10 μL min  -1 and has a cell recovery performance of 47 ± 3% after washing the trapped cells. To verify that the performance of the medium exchange device is sufficient, we tested the electrocompetence of the recovered cells in a standard transformation procedure and found a transformation efficiency of 8 × 10  5 CFU per μg of plasmid DNA. Our device is a low-volume alternative to centrifugation-based methods and opens the door for miniaturisation of a plethora of microbiological and molecular engineering protocols. </p>}},
  author       = {{Gerlt, M S and Ruppen, P and Leuthner, M and Panke, S and Dual, J}},
  issn         = {{1473-0189}},
  keywords     = {{Culture Media; DNA; Electroporation; Escherichia coli/genetics; Plasmids}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{11}},
  number       = {{22}},
  pages        = {{4487--4497}},
  publisher    = {{Royal Society of Chemistry}},
  series       = {{Lab on a Chip}},
  title        = {{Acoustofluidic medium exchange for preparation of electrocompetent bacteria using channel wall trapping}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1lc00406a}},
  doi          = {{10.1039/d1lc00406a}},
  volume       = {{21}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}